logo
NATO jets scrambled to intercept Russian spyplane as Kremlin threatens ‘direct' response to military buildup on border

NATO jets scrambled to intercept Russian spyplane as Kremlin threatens ‘direct' response to military buildup on border

The Sun4 hours ago

GERMAN fighter jets were dramatically scrambled to intercept a Russian spy plane over the Baltic Sea.
It came just hours before the Kremlin warned of a 'direct' response to NATO's growing presence on its doorstep.
8
8
Two Eurofighters roared into action on Friday after NATO radar spotted a Russian Il-20 with its transponder switched off.
The plane had taken off from Kaliningrad and was heading west toward Poland and Germany, according to Bild and The Kyiv Independent.
Germany's quick reaction team made visual contact about 100km off the coast.
They snapped a photo before the lumbering Russian aircraft turned north, skirting just 40km from the Baltic island of Usedom but staying out of German airspace.
It's the ninth time this year German jets have been scrambled to shadow Moscow's snoopers.
NATO says the Kremlin is using these flights to test alliance defences and gather intel on troop positions as the Ukraine war drags on.
The airborne drama came as Russian presidential spokesman Dmitry Peskov slammed Estonia's willingness to host NATO aircraft armed with nuclear weapons, branding it a 'direct' danger to Moscow.
'Directly, of course,' he said, when asked if such a move posed a threat, Russian news agency TASS reported.
Peskov sneered that Baltic leaders often make 'absurd' statements, and added icy relations could scarcely get any worse: 'It is very difficult to do anything worse.'
Tallinn's Defence Minister Hanno Pevkur had earlier revealed Estonia is ready to welcome NATO jets capable of carrying tactical nuclear bombs — pointing to recent visits by US F-35s that could soon be guarding the tiny nation's skies again.
It comes amid mounting alarm that Vladimir Putin is readying Russia for a showdown with NATO itself.
Bruno Kahl, head of Germany's foreign intelligence service, recently warned 'Ukraine is only a step on the journey westward,' adding: 'We have intelligence showing it.'
NATO chief Mark Rutte piled on the pressure, saying the alliance must brace for the possibility of a Russian attack by 2030.
Putin's forces have already begun amassing hardware and troops close to Finland, just 35 miles from the border, according to satellite snaps showing activity at four Russian bases — Kamenka, Petrozavodsk, Severomorsk-2 and Olenya.
Defence experts fear Moscow may attempt to provoke NATO into a limited clash, testing the alliance's Article 5 pledge of mutual defence without triggering full-scale war.
Meanwhile on the battlefield, Putin's summer push in Ukraine is grinding on at a snail's pace, with Kyiv's fierce drone attacks bogging down Russian advances.
After 448 days of fighting in Chasiv Yar in Donetsk, Moscow's troops reportedly control just half the city — clawing back land at a rate so slow that even snails would outpace them.
But with an estimated 125,000 Russian soldiers massing along Ukraine's Sumy and Kharkiv borders, Kyiv is bracing for what could be Putin's last big gamble to seize ground before negotiating a ceasefire.
Ukrainian commander-in-chief Oleksandr Syrsky said his forces had managed to pin down a 50,000-strong Russian assault near Sumy, stabilising the lines for now.
8
8
8
Back in Germany, Chancellor Friedrich Merz poured more cold water on any thaw with Moscow, telling Süddeutsche Zeitung he won't pick up the phone to Putin given Russia's relentless bombing of Ukraine.
His predecessor Olaf Scholz had broken ranks last year by speaking with the Kremlin tyrant — but Merz insisted the time for friendly calls is over.
As Putin's bombers continue to pound Kyiv and Odesa with hundreds of drones and missiles every night, NATO eyes remain fixed on the Baltic and beyond — wary that Moscow's next gambit could spark the very clash the world fears most.
It comes after Ukraine landed another humiliating blow on Vlad's war machine — blitzing two of Russia's prized Su-34 fighter jets in a daring long-range drone strike.
Kyiv's forces targeted the Marinovka military airfield in the Volgograd region, flying drones 200 miles to smash four of the £37million jets.
Two were destroyed outright, while the other pair were damaged, sending pro-war Russian Telegram channels into meltdown over the 'multi-billion dollar' losses.
Furious Kremlin cheerleaders raged the attack 'could and should have been prevented.'
Ukraine's SBU boasted the strike sparked a fire in critical infrastructure used to prep and repair Russian warplanes.
Putin lashed out in brutal revenge. Overnight, Russia flattened a 21-storey tower block in Odesa, killing a married couple and wounding at least 14 others — including three children.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Germany wants to make the military cool, with the help of a techno tank commander
Germany wants to make the military cool, with the help of a techno tank commander

Times

timean hour ago

  • Times

Germany wants to make the military cool, with the help of a techno tank commander

T o the sound of a throbbing techno beat, Joshua Krebs, wearing full army fatigues, shades and ear defenders, cavorts on top of a tank. He gives the thumbs up as shots flash from the barrel in time to the music. Krebs is a tank commander in the Bundeswehr. But he is also an important weapon in the German army's latest battle: to encourage men — and, increasingly, women — to sign up to combat the growing threat from the east. He is effectively a state-sponsored influencer, who pumps out videos under the moniker 'the cinematic sergeant' to convince young Germans that being in the army is, in fact, cool. At a summit in the Hague last week Germany, along with Britain and its Nato allies, agreed to raise defence and related expenditure to 5 per cent of their gross domestic product by 2035. For all the celebration of a commitment to defence, the hundreds of billions of pounds pledged does not account for one huge question: where will Nato countries find sufficient young recruits to fire all the guns, drive the tanks and fly the drones the new money will buy?

A week of victory for Trump, but his war with the deep state rages on
A week of victory for Trump, but his war with the deep state rages on

Times

timean hour ago

  • Times

A week of victory for Trump, but his war with the deep state rages on

'We've had a big week. We've had a lot of victories this week,' Donald Trump boasted on Friday as he made a surprise appearance in the White House briefing room after securing a win in the Supreme Court towards ending birthright citizenship. It capped off, a grinning president explained, a great week for his administration. On the list of achievements: a ceasefire between Israel and Iran after American strikes on Tehran's nuclear sites and Mark Rutte, the Nato chief, calling the president 'daddy' for getting EU leaders to finally cough up on defence. 'We're cooking. In the first few weeks, they hadn't got their sea legs. Now they've got their sea legs,' one member of the administration said. Yet there is one thing raining on 'daddy's' parade — is Trump's Iran success quite what he says it is? This is the debate dividing Washington after the White House was left furious by a leaked preliminary intelligence report by the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA) that assessed the American strike had merely delayed Iran's nuclear ambitions by a few months. The findings were in stark contrast to the US president's claim in his address to the nation last Saturday that the nuclear programme was 'OBLITERATED'.

If there's one thing we Brits have to boast about, it's modesty
If there's one thing we Brits have to boast about, it's modesty

Times

timean hour ago

  • Times

If there's one thing we Brits have to boast about, it's modesty

I'm the best columnist ever. My articles are the most beautiful in history, better than all the others, in fact. Literally millions flock to read them. They're the reason they buy The Sunday Times: that's what people are saying, I hear. Many, many people. Nope: I just can't keep that up. God, it must be hard being Donald Trump. As you may have noticed — and as those readers who comment in our digital editions will doubtless point out with speed and relish — the above statements are not entirely true. But for the purposes of this exercise, truth doesn't really matter, because I just wanted to find out what it feels like to be the president for a moment. Answer: exhausting, and a bit icky. Trump was on his usual self-effacing form last week, only taking a break from blowing his own enormous golden trumpet to receive tribute from that fawning crawler Mark Rutte. If there's one thing that's worse than a braggart, it's an arselicker. The Nato chief sent Trump a series of sycophantic texts, in which he told the sexually harassing compulsive liar how 'extraordinary' he is, and how grateful we should all be for his wisdom and beneficence. • Call him Daddy … How flattery and fanfare warmed Trump to Nato When Trump blithely published the texts to the world, Rutte didn't even have the common decency to squirm with humiliation. Instead he engaged the obsequiousness overdrive, and called him 'Daddy'. Remarkably, nobody threw up. The recipient of the praise didn't see anything embarrassing in it: he just took it as his natural due. 'I think he likes me,' Trump said, in a rare moment of understatement. The other Nato leaders didn't seem to think anything was amiss either: they were too busy doing their own sucking up. And I thought: I must have missed something. When did it become socially acceptable for people to be so very pleased with themselves? Perhaps it's a national character thing. I come from an age when, by and large, the British didn't like boasting. It wasn't in our cultural DNA. When people were pompous, we laughed at them. To some extent, that's still true. If Keir Starmer reposted a video showing an enormous gold statue of Keir Starmer, the Labour Party would slink away and die of shame. When the president of the United States does it, half his party reposts the repost. Or take the regular incumbent of this column. For the past four years, Jeremy Clarkson has documented his chosen life as a farmer, in print and on television. Has he spent this time telling us he is the best farmer ever, bragging about record harvests and Making Diddly Squat Great Again? No. He has spent it telling us he is comically useless and incompetent: he buys the wrong tractors, sows the wrong seeds, can't plough for toffee, and is only saved from disaster by the practical and knowledgeable people around him. As a result, his TV show was the most popular thing on Amazon UK. Good-humoured haplessness is our thing. • Jeremy Clarkson: I'm never starting an other business That may be changing, though, just a little, as the American love of self-promotion seeps into our daily life. Our fastest-growing social media platform, LinkedIn, is an orgy of boasting and self-congratulation; the burgeoning self-help and wellness industries are built on telling each one of us how special and wonderful we are; and the fact that Nigel Farage is not a notably modest man doesn't seem to have hurt his popularity. I hope this new trend doesn't go too far. There's a merit in modesty. People who really do great things don't have to tell us they've done great things: the things themselves do that. Einstein didn't go round saying he was a genius: he came up with a theory that changed our conception of the fundamental nature of reality, and left it there. Clement Attlee didn't say he'd personally built the welfare state. Jane Austen didn't proclaim that she was a great novelist: she just wrote Emma. We could do with her now. She would have had enormous fun with the Trumps of this world. The Bezoses, too. Austen had the keenest of eyes for boasting's bedfellow, ostentation, and The Wedding in Venice this weekend would have given her plenty to work with: the reported 27 outfits for Lauren, the $1 million worth of flowers, the fleets of accompanying private jets and superyachts. Some Venetians are outraged at the sheer, shameless showiness of it all. Protesters put a huge anti-Bezos banner in St Mark's Square, and expressed disgust that Venice is being turned into a playground for the super-rich. Hmm. Have they thought that through? Weren't all the city's most wonderful buildings created to be a playground for the rich in the first place? The Doges were not exactly a self-effacing lot: their palazzos were built for the express purpose of displaying their prodigious wealth, and they made them as showy as the technology of the day allowed. In that sense, Jeff and Lauren are more true to Venice's traditions than any of the protesters. The world's most beautiful city is a monument to more than 1,000 years of bling, and it's only the seductive patina of age that adds such venerable mystique to the baroque facades. And that's the awkward thing about all this showing off. The fact is that show-offs sometimes really do achieve stuff. The Doges built the world's most beautiful city. Bezos built the world's fourth biggest company. Trump — well, he got elected twice, and invented a previously unknown skin colour. And who knows, he may have done us all a favour in Iran. Our own national modesty isn't always a virtue: it might even be a self-fulfilling prophecy, one of the causes of our national decline. Still, I'm glad we are the way we are. At least we have a degree of insight. As I'm well aware, my columns are not the most amazing in history: like everyone, I'm just doing my best and muddling through. It's all any of us can do, in the end. How lovely it would be to hear the leader of the free world say that.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store